DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Home Repair (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/)
-   -   Is this Benchgrinder ready for the trash?? (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/313162-benchgrinder-ready-trash.html)

Ron Cliborn[_2_] November 9th 10 02:51 PM

Is this Benchgrinder ready for the trash??
 
I inherited a rough looking old bench grinder.
I put a plug on it and the thing wouldn't turn on.
As I said it was pretty old and also kind of rusty.
I figured I'd look inside before doing anything else.
When I opened it up I noticed about half a dozen of the copper
windings had burned through. IIRC, the winding is suppose to be a
single strand of wire in order to make an electromagnetic field. And
if this is the case, I should just junk the grinder right?
I has been to long since I've messed with electric motors and i can't
remember.
It would also be impossible to match and soldier the burnt wires.

So, trash it or try something else? I know they are not that
expensive new, but it is still hard to beat free.

Thanks

Ron

N8N November 9th 10 04:50 PM

Is this Benchgrinder ready for the trash??
 
On Nov 9, 9:51*am, Ron Cliborn wrote:
I inherited a rough looking old bench grinder.
I put a plug on it and the thing wouldn't turn on.
As I said it was pretty old and also kind of rusty.
I figured I'd look inside before doing anything else.
When I opened it up I noticed about half a dozen of the copper
windings had burned through. *IIRC, the winding is suppose to be a
single strand of wire in order to make an electromagnetic field. *And
if this is the case, I should just junk the grinder right?
I has been to long since I've messed with electric motors and i can't
remember.
It would also be impossible to match and soldier the burnt wires.

So, trash it or try something else? *I know they are not that
expensive new, but it is still hard to beat free.

Thanks

Ron


It's done. Salvage the wheels and keep the special left hand thread
nut, the rest is pretty much junk.

nate

Jim Yanik November 9th 10 05:22 PM

Is this Benchgrinder ready for the trash??
 
Ron Cliborn wrote in
:

I inherited a rough looking old bench grinder.
I put a plug on it and the thing wouldn't turn on.
As I said it was pretty old and also kind of rusty.
I figured I'd look inside before doing anything else.
When I opened it up I noticed about half a dozen of the copper
windings had burned through. IIRC, the winding is suppose to be a
single strand of wire in order to make an electromagnetic field.


Not true. motor windings often are multi-strand.
if you parallel many tiny strands,they can carry as much current as a
single thicker strand that is harder to wind around the core.
(and results in more copper in the same space)

And
if this is the case, I should just junk the grinder right?


well,you could try to get the motor rewound,but that would probably cost
more than a new grinder.


--
Jim Yanik
jyanik
at
localnet
dot com

hr(bob) [email protected] November 9th 10 07:40 PM

Is this Benchgrinder ready for the trash??
 
On Nov 9, 8:51*am, Ron Cliborn wrote:
I inherited a rough looking old bench grinder.
I put a plug on it and the thing wouldn't turn on.
As I said it was pretty old and also kind of rusty.
I figured I'd look inside before doing anything else.
When I opened it up I noticed about half a dozen of the copper
windings had burned through. *IIRC, the winding is suppose to be a
single strand of wire in order to make an electromagnetic field. *And
if this is the case, I should just junk the grinder right?
I has been to long since I've messed with electric motors and i can't
remember.
It would also be impossible to match and soldier the burnt wires.

So, trash it or try something else? *I know they are not that
expensive new, but it is still hard to beat free.

Thanks

Ron


Unless you need as boaat anchor, alvasge the wheels as someone
suggested and trash the rest. If you do save the left-hand-threaded
nut, mark it so that you don't go crazy at some time in the future
when you try to use it.

Ron Cliborn[_2_] November 11th 10 10:15 AM

Is this Benchgrinder ready for the trash??
 
Thanks for the response.
I thought it was toast but wanted to make sure.

Thanks again
Ron



On Tue, 09 Nov 2010 09:51:17 -0500, Ron Cliborn
wrote:

I inherited a rough looking old bench grinder.
I put a plug on it and the thing wouldn't turn on.
As I said it was pretty old and also kind of rusty.
I figured I'd look inside before doing anything else.
When I opened it up I noticed about half a dozen of the copper
windings had burned through. IIRC, the winding is suppose to be a
single strand of wire in order to make an electromagnetic field. And
if this is the case, I should just junk the grinder right?
I has been to long since I've messed with electric motors and i can't
remember.
It would also be impossible to match and soldier the burnt wires.

So, trash it or try something else? I know they are not that
expensive new, but it is still hard to beat free.

Thanks

Ron


Steve B[_10_] November 11th 10 04:44 PM

Is this Benchgrinder ready for the trash??
 

"Ron Cliborn" wrote in message
...
Thanks for the response.
I thought it was toast but wanted to make sure.

Thanks again
Ron


To make sure, hook it up and run it. If you survive, that should tell you a
lot. With machinery, there is a lot of "run until failure" modes.

Steve

Heart surgery pending?
Read up and prepare.
Learn how to care for a friend.
http://cabgbypasssurgery.com




All times are GMT +1. The time now is 07:42 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter